Editorial

When we first published our iconic image (Figure 1), devised on the fusion of BMC Biology with Journal of Biology in 2010 [1], we anticipated outraged objections from the microbial research community (among
others) with a disclaimer acknowledging an element of artistic licence in the allocation
of space per phylum (see legend to Figure 1, reproduced from [1]), successfully disarming Jonathan Eisen (http://phylogenomics.blogspot.co.uk/2011/09/no-award-to-give-out-but-here-are-some.htmlwebcite) when he justly rose to the attack last year, and so far avoiding aggrieved comment
on the underrepresentation of beetles.

Figure 1.The BMC Biology image. The problem of representing all of biology is encapsulated in the image we have
devised as an emblem for the fusion journal. Our protocellular lipid bilayer surrounding
a circular representation of a rootless phylogenetic tree omits explicit reference
to molecular and cellular structure and much else; and purists will find fault with
the phylogeny. We must ask you all to settle for the Gestalt.

We had reckoned however without the fluidity of phylogenetic classification. With
the welcome addition of Peter Holland to our Editorial Board this month, we learn
that according to the most recent version of the dendrogram we have two of the representative
organisms on our tree the wrong way round. Before we change it, it would clearly be
judicious to check whether other revisions are required; so we have left it as it
is, and invite expert input as we research the literature for recent seismic changes
in our understanding of phylogenetic relationships consequent on more sophisticated
analysis and deeper sequencing of more genomes.

A brief inspection of our own recent publications suggests, reassuringly, that we
shall be protected from much revision by the low resolution of our tree and selective
illustration of its branches. A recent paper in BMC Biology reflecting a current skirmish on the placing of turtles [2] leaves our image unaffected not only because it affirms their placing among the archosaurs
[3], but because turtles do not appear on our tree at all (see the addition to the relevant
branch in Figure 2). A recent refinement of the carnivore supertree [4] is simply ignored by our tree which has no carnivores on it; and had microsporidia
not settled down as a consensus fungal taxon [5], they could have bounced from one major branch to another of the phylogenetic tree
with absolutely no impact on the BMC Biology version, whose single-celled fungal blobs are indistinguishable from the protozoal
blobs several branches away.